Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 28, 1914, Image 1

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Huerfa Gefs Cargo of Ammunition Which Caused American Seizure of Vera Cruz
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
LXXXIII— No. 126
HOLD 4 HARRISBURG
MEN ON CHARGE OF
\ EXPRESSROBBERIES
AQ WiD Plead Guilty; Thefts
Cover Period of Three
Years
TWO OTHERS ARE ACCUSED
Stole Merchandise From Packages
and Later Took Whole Par
cels, Say Police
Six arrests, four of them made in
Harrisburg during the last twenty-four
hours, to-day brought about confes
sions which clear up a series of Adams
Kxpress Company robberies covering a
period of three years.
Goods valued at two thousand dol
lars, it is said, was stolen during that
time. Four of the men arrested live
in this city; one is from Bellefonte,
iind the sixth is a Pittsburgher. All
six men gave bail for appearance in
court and they will all plead guilty.
Those arrested are:
Clinrles Hare, 531 South Six
teenth street.
Roy E. Bitner, 152-7 Berry hill
street.
George K. Fritz, 2100 Derry
street.
John Dumni, Muench street
near Fourth street.
Wallace Rync, Bellefonte, Pa.
Stewart U.' Esherlck, Pitts
burgh, Pa.
All men arrested were employed as
express messengers running between
Philadelphia, Harrisburg and Pitts
burgh and had been in the employ of
the Adams Express Company at inter
vals during the past six years. Fritz
has been working three years: Hare,
two; Bitner and Dumm, each one year.
At the homes of the Harrisburg em
ployes goods amounting to S4OO was
recovered.
On Watch Two Years
Special Agent Joseph Hagy, of the!
Adams Express Company, of Phila
delphia. was the man who brought
about the arrests. He has been a busy
person for two years, but clues which
ctapufht about the solution to the roh
'•wies were not certain until six
months ago, following the disappear
ance of a dozen or more packages
from express ears. These packages
contained various articles of merchan
dise. Previous to that time, the thefts
were confined mostly from one to six
articles from numerous packages,
which were opened and retied.
Hare was arrested at Jiis home
shortly after 10 o'clock this morning.
He was at the breakfast table when
Special Agent Hagy with two other
officers called at his home.
"1 thought it was coming," remark
ed Hare.
Bitner has not been at work for a
week. He was at home last night
when an otficial called. Fritz was
called to the headquarters of the lo
cal agent of the Adams Express Com
pany yesterday, but was not placed
tinder arrest until in the afternoon.
Dumm made a full confession three
days ago; the Pittsburgh man was ar
rested on Monday, and the Bellefonte
man Tuesday. The cases will be heard
in the courts of each county where the
arrests were made.
When the investigation of these rob
beries started three years ago, com
tContinued on Page Hi]
GET NOTICES IN EARLY
Because Saturday is Memorial
l>ay it is absolutely necessary to
Insure publication, tliat the regu
lar church notices be in the edi
torial office of the Telegraph this
week by Friday at noon. Notices
received after this time will not
be published.
' —— k
Stores to Close
Decoration Day
Practically all Harrisburg stores
will be closed Saturday next, Deco
ration Day. They will, nowever,
remain open Friday evening until
the usual Saturday evening clos
ing hours.
Late News Bulletins
OUIMET IS FRENCH "CHAMP"
Versailles, May 28.—Francis Ouimet. American oiwii golf champion,
became amateur champion of France to-day by defeating Henry J. Top
pine of the Greenwich Country Club, Connecticut, by four up and three
to play, in the final round of 30 holes.
SEVERE EARTHQUAKE FELT
Sydney, X. S. \V\. May 28.—The most severe earthquake shocks ever
registered by Australian seismographs were recorded lit 12.30 this morn
ing by the instruments at the government observatory at Rlverview.
Indications were that the upheaval was in the neighborhood of the
Friendly Islands in the Southern Pacific.
MAY DISPOSE OF BATTLESHIPS
Washington, May 23.—A plan for disposing of the battleships Idaho
ami Mississippi to a foreign power for just what the United States paid
for their construction was laid before the Senate Naval Affairs Com
mittee to-day by Secretary Daniels.
BOMB FOUND IN FREIGHT CAR
Uindon. May 28. — V bomb filled witli gunpowder, gelatin and Iron
bolts, was found to-day In the freight car of a train at Wellingborough
The missile is believed by the authorities to have been placed there by
suffragettes.
Airs. Mary Alnau, aged 38, of Duiicannon, was brought to the llar
risburg hospital this afternoon suffering with a fractured spine. She
was struck by a heavy trace which broke while her husband was load
ing hay.
Herkimer, X. V.. May 28.—Jean (iianiui, the lfl-vcar-old bov
charged with the murder of his school teacher, Lida Beecher, was ac
quitted here on the ground of criminal imbecility.
Portland, Me., May 28.—Mrs. Thomas lirackett Itecd. widow of
the former speaker of the National House, died to-day after a brier
illness. Mrs. Heed leaves a daughter. Mrs. Arthur Haicntync, of San
Diego.
Annapolis. Md., May 28.—William R. Howlus, the St. John's Col
lege junior, who was shot by freshmen when he with other juniors
went to the underclassmen's room on Monday night, died to-day. '
Wall Street Closing.—Union Pacific. 158: Chesapeake & Ohio, 5296 •
tichigh Valley, 110: Northern Pacific . 111 %: Southern Pacific , III :y. ■ Cal
nadian Pacific, fl»8 : »/, : C„ M. & St. P.. 101: P. R. R.. Ilf'fc: Reading
185% ; New York Central, ; Amnl. Copper, 72y„; U. S. steel 63
DONALDSON ELECTED
GRAND TREASURER OF
TEMPLARS IN PENNA.
Former Commander Is Again Hon
ored at Erie Conclave—
Widely Known Mason
' ' V
WILLTAM M. DONALDSON,
Granrl Treasurer, Grand Commandery
Knights Templar nf Pennsyl
vania
Special to The Telegraph
Eric, Pa., May 28—William M. Don
aldson, Harrisburg, was elected grand
treasurer of the grand commandery
Knights Templar of Pennsylvania at
the dosing session of the sixty-first
annual conclave in this city to-day.
Mr. Donaldson, who is a prominent
[Continued on Page 16]
$6,000,000 Favored
For State Highways
Special to The Telegrnpli
Stroudsburg, Pa., May 28.—An an
nual appropriation of $6,000,000 by
the State Legislature to he taken from
general revenues, for the building and
maintenance of State highways, is rec
ommended in a report by " special
committee suggested by Governor
Tcner and appointed in January by
the State Board of Agriculture. The
report was submitted at the session
of the Farmers' Annual Normal In
stitute, delegates to which generally
approved the report.
The committee further recommend
ed that State convict labor bo used
wherever possible and tbat a strictly
"pay-as-you-go" policy lie adopted.
j
Parents Are Urged to
Tell Truths of Life
By Associated Press
Chicago, May 28.—Discussion of the
report of the special committee on
white slave traffic was the order to
day at the general assembly of the
Presbyterian church in the United
States. The report emphasized, the
slogan "no toleration; no regulation;
no recognition." and urged that the
evil be eradicated by strict enforce
ment of municipal, State and federal
laws.
Doubt was expressed in the report
of the advisability of teaching sex hy
giene in the public schools and par
ents were urged to inform their chil
dren personally of the truths of life.
"VETS'* TO VISIT SCHOOLS
The following comrades of Post 116,
G. A. R., have been detailed to visit
the public schools Friday afternoon:
J. K. Miller, Camp Curtin building; H.
A. Swartz. Forney building; J. H.
Santo, Cameron building: W. H. Moore
and Jonas Sellers, Hamilton building;
William T. Bishop, George L. Sellers,
Z. T. Baltoser, Maelay building; Rob
ert Dougherty, N. H. Carnman, Allison
building.
HARRISBURG, PA., THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 28, 1914.
Lin SAYS MANY
ATHLETES WERE PAID
TO UIN IN SCHOOL
Regular Salaries Given Famous
Football Players to Hold
Them in Carlisle
FRIEDMAN AGAIN ACCUSED
Ministers Are Said to Have Re
ceived Money From Athl
etic Treasury
Special to The Telegraph
Washington. D. C., May 28.—Inter
est in the affairs of the Carlisle In
dian School to-day centered about the
charges made by E. B. Linnen, who
made the recent investigation concern
ing the conduct of the athletic affairs
of the school and the manner in which
the athletic fund was handled by
Glenn S. "Warner, the famous coach
of the equally famous Indian football
team.
Warner has not only denied the
charges made by Linnen privately and
emphatically, but has made formal
official denial to the Department of
Justice, which now has the whole mat
ter under consideration.
Extracts from the Charges
Some of the charges made by Mr.
Linnen against Warner are interesting.
An extract from the report, indicating
their nature, follows:
"I have prepared a list comprising
twenty-three typewritten pages of
checks showing payments made out of
this athletic fund from February 9.
1!>07, to date, to which your special
attention is invited. This list of checks
I shows hundreds of payments made to
various football players, many pay
ments made to ministers, many pay
ments made to government employes
who were receiving government sal
aries. payments made to newspaper
i correspondents, payments made to at-
I torneys, press dipping bureaus, insur
ance. hotel bills and club dues at the
I mess for visiting persons; moneys paid
[Continued on Page 1«1
Munsey Visits Oyster Bay
to See Col. Roosevelt
Py Associated Press
Oyster Bay, N. Y., May 28.—Frank
A. Munsey, one of the leaders of the
Progressive campaign in 1912. came
to Oyster Bay to-day to see Colonel
Uoosevelt.
It was Mr. Munsey who, after the
campaign, launched a movement for
amalgamation of the Progressive and
Republican parties, which Colonel
Kooscvelt would not approve. Mr.
Munsey motored from New York with
George W. Perkins.
Colonel Roosevelt to-day had recov
ered from the fatigue of his trip to
Washington and apparently was as
vigorous as ever. He said he expected
several other political visitors later in
the day.
SCOTT WILL BE ELECTED
By Associated_ Press
New York, May 28.—Sixty thousand
printers throughout the United States
and Canada, associated with the In
ternational Typographical Union, are
balloting for international officials to
day. It is expected that the result will
be known approximately in two days.
Marsden G. Scott, president of Typo
graphical Union, No. 6, will be elected.
Whitman Investigating
Baseball Pools Which
Are Thriving in East
By Associated Press
New York, May 28. A thriving
business in New York and other East
ern cities is said to have been disclosed
in the investigation of alleged baseball
pools by assistants and detectives in
the office of District Attorney Charles
S.'Whltman. That such an investiga
tion was in progress became known
to-day when some of the methods of
the so-called "baseball news informa
tion bureaus" were made public.
The procedure, according to Assist
ant District Attorney Colnon, is for the
prospective subscriber to pay 25 cents
for a sealed envelope containing a
score card with blank boxes for every
team in each of five leagues—forty
teams in all —and for every day in the
week except Sunday. On the back of
the score card are the rules of the
"subscription." Each score card was
five teams punched as its particular
combination for "premiums," for the
largest numbers of runs scored by any
combination in the week. Premiums
are also quoted for the lowest number
of runs. The real interest, it was
pointed out, is not in the week-old re
ports of baseball nor in the hour by
hour news of the standing of teams
which the bureaus furnish subscribers,
but in the "premiums" to the winners.
IXVHSTIGATORB TO EXAMINE
BOOKS OF J. P. MORGAN & CO.
By Associated Press
New York, May 28. —Investigators
of (he Interstate Commerce Commis
sion to-day were prepared to begin an
investigation of the books of J. P.
Morgan & Co. as they relate to trans
actions of the New York. New Haven
and Hartford Railroad. Conditions
under which the Morgan firm granted
permission for an examination of these
books were agreed to at a conference
yesterday between Joseph W. Polk,
counsel for the commission, and Fran
cis Eynde Stetson, attorney for the
firm.
UN WRITTEN 1, \\V GETS MAN
VERDICT OF SECOND DEGREE
By Associated rress
Chardon, Ohio, May 28.—Ernest O.
Zimmcr WHS found guilty of murder
in the second degree this morning in
connection with the shooting to death
of William Eggleston, a neighbor
farmer. on January 17. Sentence has
not yet been pronounced, dimmer's
defense was the unwritten law and
self-defense. Mrs. Ziriimer on the
stand bared her relations with Egstles
| ton in an effort to save her husband.
PLAYGROIIi SEASON 1
TO OPEN FORMALLY
ion. JUNE IS
Seventy Applications Filed For
Twenty-two Places That
Must Be Filled
STAPLES TO ARRIVE SOON
Many Old Inslructors Want to Take
Charge of Work Under
Supervisor
Harrisburg's playground season for
1914 will be formally launched Wed
nesday, June 3, when J. K. Staples, the
general supervisor, confers with the
applicants lor boy and girl instructor
ships and selects the staff.
The opening of the playgrounds will
probably not follow until a week or
ten days later, perhaps not even until
June 15, but the work will be organ
ized, the details of the plans threshed
out and the program completed at
next Wednesday's conference.
Seventy applications have been filed
for the twenty-two places that must
be filled. Fifty of the applicants are
girls and twenty are boys.
Some of the crack girl and boy
athletes of the two high schools are
among those who have asked for
places. Many of the instructors of
both sexes who served last summer
applied again. These included Miss
Mary E. Stewart, the sewing instruct
ress; Misses Margaret Turner, Mary
Elizabeth McCormick, Mary Braxton,
Margaret Turner. V. Cordelia Brenne
man, Helen S. Xeidig, Margaretta Q.
Dougherty, Dorothy V. McCormick,
Mary M. Johnson and Edith Hall;
Merle Toomey, George W. Hill, Floyd
Ebner, E. L,. Manning, Jesse Krall,
Glennon Melville and Ueslie Hall.
The positions to be filled include
playground instructors and assistants,
! bathhouse keepers and assistants, raf
| fia, sewing 'and cooking Instructors,
jand assistants, folk dancing and camp
instructors.
Mr. Staples expects to leave Hous
ton. Texas, bv Saturday and will be
in this city probably Monday or Tues
day.
The park season will be opened Sat
urday, Memorial Day, when eleven
park cops will go on duty.
Scenery Constructed
For Religious Plays
fly Associated Press
New York, May 28. Churches
throughout the country and societies'
affiliated with tlicm are now able to
produce religious plays written In
proper dramatic form with stage di
rections and properties, through the
establishment in this city of the ex
position department of Missionary
Education movement.
This new department, which is one
of the most Interesting developments
of modern church work, was organ
ized last January. Announcement is
made to-day that it is now able to
offer a play, with scenery for its pro
duction, to churches for use in illus
trating in dramatic fjorm, its home
and foreign missionary work. A store
house here is now fully equipped with
scenery and properties, together with
costumes, household and other imple
ments and everything needed to set a
church play. The properties may all
be rented for a nominal sum by the
religious organizations for which they
are intended. They cannot be had for
I secular purposes at any price.
Fifty Firemen Overcome
by Smoke While Fighting
Blaze in Detroit, Mich.
fly Associated Press
Detroit, Mich., May 28.—More than
fifty firemen were overcome by smoke
and ten partly conscious foreigners
were dragged to safety from the flames
which swept the basement of the Union
Station here last night. The fire, one
of the most stubborn in the history of
Detroit, was not completely extln- j
gulshed until early to-day. The cause
has not been determined, but it started
in a room in the basement where rec
ords were kept. The loss is estimated
at $30,000. The firemen confined the
flames to the basement.
The station is used by the Wabash,
Pere Marquette and Canadian Pacific
Railroads. The old Michigan Central
station, a short distance away, re
cently was destroyed by tire.
Cooler Weather Coming;
Heat Prostration Today
Relief from the hot wave is prom
ised to-night, when, according to
Weather Forecaster Demain, it will
probably be about ten degrees cooler
than last night, and the cool weather
will stay with us for about twenty
four hours. After that more hot
weather is due, although indications
are that it will not be so extreme as
(hat suffered yesterday. At 6 o'clock
this morning the thermometer regis
tered 74 degrees, which was six de
grees cooler than yesterday 'at the
same time; and the mercury was not
So high to-day.
Another case of heat prostration
occurred .however, to-day, when John
J. Zimmerman, who is Bfi years of age,
was walking in the yard of his home
at 157 Paxton street. He at once re
ceived medical attention and his con
dition Is reported as favorable toward
recovery.
Anti-trust Bill May
Pass Before Next Week
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., May 28.—Under
the "five-minute rule" debate on tho
Clayton omnibus anti-trust 1)111 was to
be resumed in the House to-day. With
a compromise already effected between
the labor leaders and administration
leaders on the labor provisions of the
bill it WHS the confident hope of those
in charge that the measure Would be
passed either Friday or early next
week.
HONOR STUDENTS OF TECHN
ARE NAKED BY PRINCIPAL CHARLES B. FAGER
Br
CH ESTER BUFFINGTON,
Valedictor'un Honors
1*5% #fk I
ill!! -imMHBMW
LAWSON MATTER,
Third Honorman
All four of the honor men had averages t.bove 90 per cent. Buffington
will receive the Tech Alumni Association prize of $25.
Fleming Won't Be Shaved
With Pascal Hall's Razor
So Youthful Murderer Has Gone in For the Alternative;
He's Raisin g a Beard
Martin Fleming has grown a gener
ous, luxuriant black beard, because
he doesn't want to be shaved by the
same razor that is used upon Pascal
Hall.
Fleming and Hall occupy adjoining
cells on tier "S" of the Dauphin coun
ty prison. That is the tier that is
more generally called "murderers'
row."
Both Fleming and Hall have been
convicted of murder. Fleming is
awaiting argument on his appeal for
a new I rial. Hail was to have been
hanged Tuesday, but was reprieved un
til June 24, when his case will He
Lancaster Woman to
Try Matrimony Third
Time Despite Failures
Twice divorcee, pretty Lillian Good,
aged 33, Lancaster, to-day appeared in
the Dauphin county marriage license
bureau with Ross Stewart, a 36-year
old widower of the same place, and
got a license to try it again.
The bride-elect's first divorce was
granted about twelve years ago; her
second was granted in December of
1912. The groom-elect's first wife died
in November, 1908.
Twenty-six Men Are
Charged With Murder
By Associated Press
Canon City, Col., May 2 B.—Twenty
six men are charged with murder and
seventy-six with rioting in the report
of the Fremont county grand jury,
which yesterday returned sixteen true
bills against 105 defendants on charges
growing out of the tight at the
Chandler mine on April 25 in which
William King was killed.
Twelve of those charged with mur
der are under arrest, including Charles
Battley, district organizer of the United
Mine Workers of America; Thomas
Gaston, president of the Rockvale
local union; Felix Pogliano and
Thomas Scott, union officials.
F. C. Hedges, editor of the Fremont
County Democrat, at Florence, is
among those indicted. He is charged
with inciting riot by means of articles
published in his paper.
Think Murdered Girl
Will Never Be Avenged
Special to The Telegraph
Carlisle, Pa., May 28.—That Hazel
Myers' murder will never be avenged
is the general opinion prevailing
throughout Cumberland county and
near the home of the dead girl's
father, Parker Myers, at York Springs.
Authorities here will neither con
firm nor deny reports concerning the
disappearance of Salvaturl Cramacelli,
the young Italian, who was the last
person said to have been seen with
the Myers girl Thursday night.
Inquiries to-day at the Mt. Holly
clay works brought the statement that
Cramacelli had disappeared. The an
nouncement yesterday that he had
probably left the country Is believed to 1
be true by the father of the murdered I
girl and by friends who have been
showing considerable activity in the
,efforts to locate the murderer.
l|j§* jj
i *
Hp ggf
Hh ■
jMpP
FORREST HEBERLIG,
Salutatoriaa
WL mm
Ea ' 'Si '-J&r/Jm ~
ROBERT HOFFMAN,
Fourth Honors
Photos, Gaugltr Studio
I submitted to tho Board of Pardons in
an effort. to obtain a commutation of
■ sentence on the grounds of Insanity.
W. L. lioeser, counsel for Fleming,
says bis client bad gone in for hirsute
|adornment of tlie kind, simply because
be objects to the razor that serves for
Hail,
Jail officials say that Fleming has
only objected to the use of the same
blade that serves for Hall, but Flem
ing, It is said, prefers not to be shaven
with a safety-razor.
.So, instead of .a shave several times
a week. Fleming-just has his beard
trimmed with the scissors.
Editor Who Wrote About
Funston's "Chinese Face"
Leaves Mexican Capital
.Sfecial to The Telegraph
Vara Cruz, May ,28.-r-The editor of
H.l Independiente, one of General
Huerta's papers in Mexico City, which
was among those that most flagrantly
distorted the fact of the American
landing here, is said to have passed
I through Vera Cruz, taking ship for
Europe a day or so ago. The editor
|is reported to have felt certain that'
lie would be executed if he remained
lin the capital until the collapse of
General Huerta.
El Independiente recently published
what purported to be a picture of
Brigadier General Funston with a
heading saying:
This is the picture of the Amer
ican General Funston, whose face
is more like that of a Chinaman
than that of a white man and who
has constantly violated the armis
tice.
General Funston said, when ne
heard the editor had departed, he
would have found some pleasure in
Interviewing him as he passed
through.
Tradesmen Advocate
More Honest Dealing
By Associated Press
Washington, May 28.—Assurances
by Secretaries Bryan and Kedfield to
the National Foreign Trade Conven
tion. in session here, that the Admin
istration earnestly desires to increase
American foreign commerce and to
widen the Held of American enterprise
through co-operation with the busi
ness men of the country, was being
discussed with keen Interest to-day by
delegates to the convention. As prime
essentials in this movement, Secre
tary Bryan, Senator Burton, of Ohio,
and other prominent speakers advo
cated a spirit of peace and tfood will
toward all foreign nations and a policy
of honest business dealing.
Clogging of Mail Chute
Causes Delivery Delay
Clogging of a letter chute, running
from the fourth to the first floor of the
south wing of the Capitol, it was found
to-day. was responsible for tlie loss of
mall and failure of delivery of postal
matter issued from the offices in that
wing.
The chute was clogged for nearly
two weeks, tn Some way a large pack
age became jammed In tho chutfi near
the second floor, and nothing could get
uast it- I
GES * POSTSCRIPT.
16 PA'
HUERTJI RECEIVES,
IRMS WHICH CAUSED
SEIZUREJ F POHTi
Ypiranga Lands Munitions Which
Were Held Up by Ameri
can Marines
UNLOADED AT PUERTO, MEXICO
Provisional President May Be
Asked to Tell For What Use
He Wants Them
By Associated Press
Washington, D. C., May 28.—Predic
tions that a protocol would be signed
by the lluerta and American delegates
to the Niagara conference within the
next week and reports that the Ham
burg-American steamer Ypiranga hart
delivered ammunition for the Federals
at Puerta Mexico, were widely vary
ing features in the Mexican situation
that engaged the President and his
advisers to-day.
i While it would have been Impossi
ble to have prevented the delivery of
munitions for lluerta without viola
tion of the truce between the Federals
and the American government, yet the
incident recalled that the Ypiranga'!*
movements precipitated the occupa
tion of Vera Cruz to balk the landing
of the very war cargo that now will
reach lluerta through the Tehuante
peu railroad port.
Has Xot Told of Use
Whether the Federal dictator would
attempt to make any explanation of
the use to which ho intended to put
the ammunition, as he explained the
recent movement of his troops to meet
I Constitutionalists west of Tamplco,
was a topic of interest here to-day.,
()fficial reports that lluerta had re
[ i-eived an additional cargo from the
Hamburg-American liner Bavaria,
were borne out by statements from.
Mexico City that two large shipments
of munitions had been received in the
last two weeks. Suggestions of the
way they would be employed were
conveyed in the statement that the
Federals now were well supplied with,
ammunition "to carry on their cam
paign against the Constitutionalists."
Continued optimistic news from.
Niagara Palls encouraged administra
tion chiefs to-day. It was declared
[Continued on Page I#]
Man Who Killed Rupp
Is Seriously 111
Special to The Telegraph
Carlisle, Pa., May 28.—John Bent,
alias Morgannan, alias Morgenthal,
charged with the murder of John
llupp, .a farmer, of near Mechanics
burg. was in a. critical condition last
night. He is improved to-day.
The bullet in Kent's arm has not
been removed. The wound will not
heal and yesterday Bent was a very
sick man and it was feared he was
suffering with blood poison. Medical
aid was summoned and Bent im
proved.
Bent will waive a hearing for Sep
tember court. Attorneys Edwin G.
Barnitz and William A. Zerby, counsel
for Bent, to-day announced that there
would be no preliminary hearing. Dis
trict Attorney Alexander will be as
sisted by Attorney W. A. Clymer iu
looking after the Commonwealth side.
|
I THE WEATHER
For Hnrrlsliurg and vicinity: Fair
to-night ami Friday; cooler to
night.
For Hastcrn Pennsylvaniai Partly
cloudy weather to-night and Fri
day, somewhat .lower tempera
ture; light to moderate northwest
winds.
River
The main river will rise slowly to
night and Friday. A stage of
nhont 3.2 feet Is Indicated for
Rarrlshurg Friday morning;. The
North llraneli will rise to-night
and Frldny. except the upper
portion will hegln to fall Friday.
Only slight changes are Indtcnted
for, the West Ilranch and the
Juniata.
General Conditions
The northwestern high pressure
area has Joined the southeast
ern high and the united areas
now cover n broad belt of coun
try extending from the northern
part of the CJreat Takes to the
South Atlantic const. A new- dis
turbance from the Far North
west now covers the greater part
of the territory between the
ltocky Mountains and the Missis
sippi river with Its center over
Western Dakota.
Temperature) 8 a. in., 74) 2 p. m., 86.
Mum Rises, 4:41 a. m.; sets, 7:23
p. in.
Moon: First quarter, June 3, liSO
a. m.
River Stage: Three feet above low
water mark.
Yesterday's Wen the®
Highest temperature, 110.
I .owe st temperature, 64.
Mean temperature, 77.
Normal temperature, 05,
MARRIAGE I.IC'KNSF.S
George D. Rowen and Nora Irene
Wagner. Allentown.
John Krospany and Lenka Meraszas.
Steelton.
Lillian Good and Ross Stewart, Lan
caster.
Trade Follows Value
This is a merchandising axiom
well borne out by experience.
Value does not necessarily
mean low prices. It may more
likely mean superiority of ser
vice or of quality.
The advertisements in to-day's
Telegraph are the weather-vanes
of value.
They show how the trade
winds are blowing.
Read them carefully before
you do your shopping, for they
may guide you to something bet
ter than you expected.
Kach day the advertisements
have a new story to tell—a story
that is as fresh and interesting
as the llvest piece of news in
the newspaper.